Environmental Historian
Alfred W. Crosby

Professor Emeritus of History, Geography, and American Studies
The University of Texas at Austin

Member
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
American Philosophical Society
The Academy of Finland



Alfred W. Crosby was born in Boston in 1931. He graduated from Harvard College in 1952 and served in the U. S. Army 1952-1955, stationed in Panama. After his army service he earned an M.A.T. from the Harvard School of Education and a Ph.D. in history from Boston University in 1961. His dissertation was published as his first book, America, Russia, Hemp, and Napoleon, a study of relations between Russia and the U.S.A. from the time of the American Revolution through the War of 1812. During his academic career he taught at Albion College, the Ohio State University, Washington State University, and finally the University of Texas at Austin. He retired from the University of Texas in 1999 as Professor Emeritus of Geography, History, and American Studies.

His involvement in the Civil Rights movement, teaching Black Studies, helping to build a medical center for the United Farm Workers’ Union, and taking a leadership role in anti-Vietnam War demonstrations set him off in intellectually unorthodox directions. He became particularly interested in the histories of people who were victimized, economically exploited, or enslaved in the advance of European imperialism and capitalism, and thereby in the influence in that advance of nonpolitical, nonreligious, and largely ignored factors—especially infectious disease.

All this did not make of him a Marxist radical, because—as he put it—he was not that much of an optimist. It did, however, inspire interest in demography and epidemiology, which led him to write several books—The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492; America’s Forgotten Pandemic (originally Epidemic and Peace 1918); and Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900-1900. His fascination with several subdivisions of intellectual and technological history produced The Measure of Reality: Quantification and Western Society, 1250-1600; Throwing Fire: Projectile Technology Through History; and Children of the Sun: A History of Humanity’s Unappeasable Appetite for Energy. His work as a historian, he said, turned him from facing the past to facing the future.


Books

Children of the Sun: A History of Humanity's Unappeasable Appetite for
Energy.
W.W. Norton 2006.

Throwing Fire: Projectile Technology Through History. Cambridge
University Press 2002. Available in Turkish and Japanese translations.

The Measure of Reality: Quantification and Western Society, 1250-1600.
Cambridge University Press 1997. Available in Spanish, Portuguese,
French, Italian, Swedish, Japanese, and Korean translations.

Germs, Seeds, and Animals: Studies in Ecological History. M. E. Sharpe
1994.

America's Forgotten Pandemic: The Influenza of 1918. Cambridge
University Press 1989, 2003. Originally published as Epidemic and
Peace, 1918. Available in Japanese translation.

Ecological Imperialism: The Biological Expansion of Europe, 900-1900.
Cambridge University Press 1986, 1993, 2004. Available in German,
Swedish, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Polish, Greek, Turkish, Chinese,
Japanese, and Korean translations.

Epidemic and Peace, 1918. Greenwood Press 1976. Republished as
America's Forgotten Pandemic.

The Columbian Exchange: Biological and Cultural Consequences of 1492.
Greenwood Press 1972, Praeger Publishers 2003. Available in Spanish,
Italian, and Korean translations.

America, Russia, Hemp, and Napoleon: American Trade with Russia and the
Baltic, 1793-1812
. Ohio State University Press 1965.


Contact: acrosby@nantucket.net